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Singapore is preparing to take in significantly more new citizens and permanent residents (PRs) over the next five years
It’s a move the Singapore government says is necessary as fewer Singaporeans are getting married and having children.
Speaking in Parliament on 26 February, Deputy Prime Minister Gan Kim Yong laid out what he described as an “existential challenge” facing the country: a rapidly ageing population and a birth rate that continues to fall.

Fewer marriages, fewer babies, and a shrinking future
Gan made it clear that the issue goes beyond just low birth rates.
“Marriage rates have come down; those who are married have fewer children, or no children. Over time, it will be practically impossible to reverse the trend because we will have fewer and fewer women who can bear children.”
Singapore recorded just 27,500 births in 2025, the lowest in its history, with its fertility rate dropping to 0.87.
But more importantly, Gan warned that the effects are long-term and compounding.
“You can’t overnight… give birth to young people. So you have fewer births, [which] means you have fewer young people for the next two or three decades.”
Gan said the decline in births, combined with a rapidly ageing population, could fundamentally reshape Singapore in the decades ahead.
“If no new measures are taken, our citizen population will start to shrink by the early part of the 2040s.”
*2025 figure is preliminary.
Source: Department of Statistics Singapore / DPM Gan Kim Yong (Speech on 26 Feb 2026)
Despite the worsening trend, Gan stressed that the government is not backing away from efforts to encourage marriage and parenthood
“[Prime Minister Lawrence Wong] said we have not given up… Let me add one more: we cannot give up.”
He acknowledged that the decline is driven by deeper shifts in priorities and lifestyle.
“Attitudes towards marriage and parenthood are shaped by many factors… workplace norms, employer practices, availability of support, and social attitudes.”
Singapore has already rolled out measures like expanded parental leave and support for families, but Gan said more needs to be done across society, not just by the government.
At the same time, Singapore is increasing immigration
Even as it tries to reverse the trend, the government is moving ahead with a more immediate solution: bringing in more people.





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